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Europe
EU expects to sign Bosnia pact in April
2008-02-27
BRUSSELS - The European Union, concerned at tensions in the Balkans fuelled by Kosovo’s declaration of independence, expects to sign a key pact on closer ties with Bosnia in April, Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said Tuesday. ‘I would expect that we should be able to sign the SAA (Stabilisation and Association Agreement) with Bosnia-Hercegovina shortly, that is in April,’ he told AFP.

However Rehn underlined that the signing was conditional on Bosnia-Hercegovina adopting requisite laws concerning the police, ‘which they know very well.’

The EU has made police reforms a key condition for Bosnia to seal an SAA accord, essentially a trade and aid pact which is the first step towards joining the rich European club. Rehn and Bosnian officials put their initials to the pact in December, but the EU has refused to sign it until the police reforms are undertaken.

The leaders of BosniaÂ’s Serb community insist on retaining control of police in their Republika Srpska entity, which along with the Muslim-Croat Federation makes up post-war Bosnia. But Croat and Muslim leaders want the forces to be unified and put under the authority of the state.

The head of the EU’s police mission in Bosnia, Brigadier General Vincenzo Coppola, underlined Tuesday that three previous EU-driven attempts at obtaining the police reforms had failed. The latest attempt, led by the ethnic communities themselves, is a ‘very minimal approach, but nevertheless it could be a step forward if they are willing to pass the laws.’ He told reporters in Brussels. ‘If they don’t produce something, there will be no signature of the SAA.’

RehnÂ’s remarks came with Bosnian leaders due in Brussels Tuesday and Wednesday to evaluate developments in Bosnia, and as the mandate of the EU and international representative there, Miroslav Lajcak, comes up for renewal. The EU is still supervising inter-communal relations, which remain complicated 12 years after the Dayton accords that ended the 1992-1995 war there.

The recent declaration of independence by Kosovo has been met by a threat from the Bosnian Serbs to follow its example and break away-something the EU dearly wants to avoid.
Which makes no sense: once you recognize the right of an ethnically homogenous region to form a state (e.g., Kosovo), you've let the genie out of the bottle. Not only a Bosnian Serb region but Catalonia, the Basque region, the Tyrol, etc., all become regions that could make a claim to statehood. The time to stop that was before Kosovo, if indeed it was a principle that the Euros wanted to uphold.
Posted by:Steve White

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